Today at Kauai Aadheenam

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After years of carving in Bangalore and months of complicated shipping proccedures, Hanuman has finally reached the monastery. The team at Aloha Isle Moving company are the ones who helped unload Hanuman and all other stones from the shipping containers. We're grateful to them for always putting our stone arrival on the highest priority, and with the most experienced staff and operators to handle all the delicate pieces. Hanuman particularly challenged them due to his weight and length. To date they have delivered about 70 containers of stones!

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013 at 6:29 pm and is filed under Construction.
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The Media Studio's new entryway is progressing nicely. The rafters have been installed after months of detailed work. They all fit wonderfully.

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013 at 2:48 pm and is filed under Construction.
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A new phase begins today. This morning a homa was conducted in Kaduval temple. Those in attendance wrote notes and prayers for the devas to be burned in the sacred fire. Bodhinatha gave a short talk afterwards, expressing the significance and power of our daily sadhana, no matter how simple it may be. He explained the importance for youth to develop a habit of daily sadhana, even if it is just 10 minutes a day.

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013 at 2:03 pm and is filed under Monastery.
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On the second evening at the Svami Gitananda Ashram in Italy, Svami Yogananda Giri gathered all the mathavasis together to meet with us in a hall. He
invited Paramacharya Sadasivanathaswami to give a talk to them all. It was clear that this was a rare event in their life and each one was yogicly attentive.

Paramacharya spoke about the centrality of paramparai and the paramount importance of the guru-shishya relationship. He offered that the monks here are blessed to live a traditional life with a remarkable guru, then added that Swamiji is also blessed, for it is not easy to gather together such dedicated and competent monks. Swamiji laughed heartily. Details of our Kauai monastery and mission were briefly mentioned at Swamiji's request and then Paramacharya addressed the younger monks, all seated on the left. He spoke of the importance of a life without conflict and conveyed the message that Gurudeva would always tell another monastic order when invited to speak to them: "Obey your guru… Obey your guru… Obey your guru."

He also shared about how we maintain harmony in our monastery through
such practices as settling all disagreements before sleep, something
Gurudeva mandated that we follow strictly, and which works very well
for us. Harmony isn't a given, even in a monastery. Our monks--and
theirs--are intelligent, strong-minded people, and sometimes naturally
we bump up against each other a bit and hurt feelings are caused.

It is through living together in a community, as a spiritual brotherhood,
that our karmas come up to be resolved. And if we don't resolve them, we're not
doing our job as monks. Gurudeva asserted that spiritual
work cannot be done when there is conflict in the air. And unresolved
experiences go into the subconscious mind only to fester and result in
greater problems later on. Thus, harmony has to be worked at to be
maintained. the young ones smiles and quick glances to each other told of their knowing.

Svamiji clearly liked the topic (not one any other visitor would dare explore) and even though it was made clear that we were not suggesting that they follow our model, the look in
Svamiji's eyes told that he was seriously thinking about what was said!

At the end, to our surprise, Svamiji approached with shawls and gifts for the traveling swamis. We gifted him with a special Rudraksha mala made by the Wailua Mission (ten were made and have been our gift of choice throughout).

The parallels between our two orders, even with the monks being almost
all female (17 out of 20) at the Italian monastery and all male at the
Kauai monastery, are remarkable. They work through their publications
to educate Italians and Italian Hindus about Hinduism, to dispel myths
and misinformation. They divide up the work at the monastery so that
not any one person is responsible for too many areas, just like us;
they have a grounds group, a publications group, an administration
group, a temple group.

They also work with the Italian government through the Italian Hindu
Union that they helped found, in order to advocate for proper
recognition and treatment of Hindus in this old, conservative country
inside of which the Vatican is located. Just this year they
accomplished something enormous: full recognition of Hinduism as a
religion. Thus, starting next year when the new law goes into effect,
Hindu marriages will be recognized in Italy, along with all the
customary benefits typically afforded an officially recognized
religion. This achievement is enormous and will transform the lives of every Hindu in Italy in the years ahead.

We hope you're enjoying reading about this unusually parallel group of
Western-born monks as much as we enjoyed visiting with them. More tomorrow of their temple sadhanas.

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013 at 12:18 pm and is filed under Travel Missions.
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